Documentation / git-remote-helpers.txton commit Documentation/git-push: clarify the description of defaults (cfe1348)
   1git-remote-helpers(1)
   2=====================
   3
   4NAME
   5----
   6git-remote-helpers - Helper programs to interact with remote repositories
   7
   8SYNOPSIS
   9--------
  10[verse]
  11'git remote-<transport>' <repository> [<URL>]
  12
  13DESCRIPTION
  14-----------
  15
  16Remote helper programs are normally not used directly by end users,
  17but they are invoked by git when it needs to interact with remote
  18repositories git does not support natively.  A given helper will
  19implement a subset of the capabilities documented here. When git
  20needs to interact with a repository using a remote helper, it spawns
  21the helper as an independent process, sends commands to the helper's
  22standard input, and expects results from the helper's standard
  23output. Because a remote helper runs as an independent process from
  24git, there is no need to re-link git to add a new helper, nor any
  25need to link the helper with the implementation of git.
  26
  27Every helper must support the "capabilities" command, which git
  28uses to determine what other commands the helper will accept.  Those
  29other commands can be used to discover and update remote refs,
  30transport objects between the object database and the remote repository,
  31and update the local object store.
  32
  33Git comes with a "curl" family of remote helpers, that handle various
  34transport protocols, such as 'git-remote-http', 'git-remote-https',
  35'git-remote-ftp' and 'git-remote-ftps'. They implement the capabilities
  36'fetch', 'option', and 'push'.
  37
  38INVOCATION
  39----------
  40
  41Remote helper programs are invoked with one or (optionally) two
  42arguments. The first argument specifies a remote repository as in git;
  43it is either the name of a configured remote or a URL. The second
  44argument specifies a URL; it is usually of the form
  45'<transport>://<address>', but any arbitrary string is possible.
  46The 'GIT_DIR' environment variable is set up for the remote helper
  47and can be used to determine where to store additional data or from
  48which directory to invoke auxiliary git commands.
  49
  50When git encounters a URL of the form '<transport>://<address>', where
  51'<transport>' is a protocol that it cannot handle natively, it
  52automatically invokes 'git remote-<transport>' with the full URL as
  53the second argument. If such a URL is encountered directly on the
  54command line, the first argument is the same as the second, and if it
  55is encountered in a configured remote, the first argument is the name
  56of that remote.
  57
  58A URL of the form '<transport>::<address>' explicitly instructs git to
  59invoke 'git remote-<transport>' with '<address>' as the second
  60argument. If such a URL is encountered directly on the command line,
  61the first argument is '<address>', and if it is encountered in a
  62configured remote, the first argument is the name of that remote.
  63
  64Additionally, when a configured remote has 'remote.<name>.vcs' set to
  65'<transport>', git explicitly invokes 'git remote-<transport>' with
  66'<name>' as the first argument. If set, the second argument is
  67'remote.<name>.url'; otherwise, the second argument is omitted.
  68
  69INPUT FORMAT
  70------------
  71
  72Git sends the remote helper a list of commands on standard input, one
  73per line.  The first command is always the 'capabilities' command, in
  74response to which the remote helper must print a list of the
  75capabilities it supports (see below) followed by a blank line.  The
  76response to the capabilities command determines what commands Git uses
  77in the remainder of the command stream.
  78
  79The command stream is terminated by a blank line.  In some cases
  80(indicated in the documentation of the relevant commands), this blank
  81line is followed by a payload in some other protocol (e.g., the pack
  82protocol), while in others it indicates the end of input.
  83
  84Capabilities
  85~~~~~~~~~~~~
  86
  87Each remote helper is expected to support only a subset of commands.
  88The operations a helper supports are declared to git in the response
  89to the `capabilities` command (see COMMANDS, below).
  90
  91'option'::
  92        For specifying settings like `verbosity` (how much output to
  93        write to stderr) and `depth` (how much history is wanted in the
  94        case of a shallow clone) that affect how other commands are
  95        carried out.
  96
  97'connect'::
  98        For fetching and pushing using git's native packfile protocol
  99        that requires a bidirectional, full-duplex connection.
 100
 101'push'::
 102        For listing remote refs and pushing specified objects from the
 103        local object store to remote refs.
 104
 105'fetch'::
 106        For listing remote refs and fetching the associated history to
 107        the local object store.
 108
 109'import'::
 110        For listing remote refs and fetching the associated history as
 111        a fast-import stream.
 112
 113'refspec' <refspec>::
 114        This modifies the 'import' capability, allowing the produced
 115        fast-import stream to modify refs in a private namespace
 116        instead of writing to refs/heads or refs/remotes directly.
 117        It is recommended that all importers providing the 'import'
 118        capability use this.
 119+
 120A helper advertising the capability
 121`refspec refs/heads/*:refs/svn/origin/branches/*`
 122is saying that, when it is asked to `import refs/heads/topic`, the
 123stream it outputs will update the `refs/svn/origin/branches/topic`
 124ref.
 125+
 126This capability can be advertised multiple times.  The first
 127applicable refspec takes precedence.  The left-hand of refspecs
 128advertised with this capability must cover all refs reported by
 129the list command.  If no 'refspec' capability is advertised,
 130there is an implied `refspec *:*`.
 131
 132Capabilities for Pushing
 133~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
 134'connect'::
 135        Can attempt to connect to 'git receive-pack' (for pushing),
 136        'git upload-pack', etc for communication using the
 137        packfile protocol.
 138+
 139Supported commands: 'connect'.
 140
 141'push'::
 142        Can discover remote refs and push local commits and the
 143        history leading up to them to new or existing remote refs.
 144+
 145Supported commands: 'list for-push', 'push'.
 146
 147If a helper advertises both 'connect' and 'push', git will use
 148'connect' if possible and fall back to 'push' if the helper requests
 149so when connecting (see the 'connect' command under COMMANDS).
 150
 151Capabilities for Fetching
 152~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
 153'connect'::
 154        Can try to connect to 'git upload-pack' (for fetching),
 155        'git receive-pack', etc for communication using the
 156        packfile protocol.
 157+
 158Supported commands: 'connect'.
 159
 160'fetch'::
 161        Can discover remote refs and transfer objects reachable from
 162        them to the local object store.
 163+
 164Supported commands: 'list', 'fetch'.
 165
 166'import'::
 167        Can discover remote refs and output objects reachable from
 168        them as a stream in fast-import format.
 169+
 170Supported commands: 'list', 'import'.
 171
 172If a helper advertises 'connect', git will use it if possible and
 173fall back to another capability if the helper requests so when
 174connecting (see the 'connect' command under COMMANDS).
 175When choosing between 'fetch' and 'import', git prefers 'fetch'.
 176Other frontends may have some other order of preference.
 177
 178'refspec' <refspec>::
 179        This modifies the 'import' capability.
 180+
 181A helper advertising
 182`refspec refs/heads/*:refs/svn/origin/branches/*`
 183in its capabilities is saying that, when it handles
 184`import refs/heads/topic`, the stream it outputs will update the
 185`refs/svn/origin/branches/topic` ref.
 186+
 187This capability can be advertised multiple times.  The first
 188applicable refspec takes precedence.  The left-hand of refspecs
 189advertised with this capability must cover all refs reported by
 190the list command.  If no 'refspec' capability is advertised,
 191there is an implied `refspec *:*`.
 192
 193COMMANDS
 194--------
 195
 196Commands are given by the caller on the helper's standard input, one per line.
 197
 198'capabilities'::
 199        Lists the capabilities of the helper, one per line, ending
 200        with a blank line. Each capability may be preceded with '*',
 201        which marks them mandatory for git version using the remote
 202        helper to understand (unknown mandatory capability is fatal
 203        error).
 204
 205'list'::
 206        Lists the refs, one per line, in the format "<value> <name>
 207        [<attr> ...]". The value may be a hex sha1 hash, "@<dest>" for
 208        a symref, or "?" to indicate that the helper could not get the
 209        value of the ref. A space-separated list of attributes follows
 210        the name; unrecognized attributes are ignored. The list ends
 211        with a blank line.
 212+
 213If 'push' is supported this may be called as 'list for-push'
 214to obtain the current refs prior to sending one or more 'push'
 215commands to the helper.
 216
 217'option' <name> <value>::
 218        Sets the transport helper option <name> to <value>.  Outputs a
 219        single line containing one of 'ok' (option successfully set),
 220        'unsupported' (option not recognized) or 'error <msg>'
 221        (option <name> is supported but <value> is not valid
 222        for it).  Options should be set before other commands,
 223        and may influence the behavior of those commands.
 224+
 225Supported if the helper has the "option" capability.
 226
 227'fetch' <sha1> <name>::
 228        Fetches the given object, writing the necessary objects
 229        to the database.  Fetch commands are sent in a batch, one
 230        per line, terminated with a blank line.
 231        Outputs a single blank line when all fetch commands in the
 232        same batch are complete. Only objects which were reported
 233        in the ref list with a sha1 may be fetched this way.
 234+
 235Optionally may output a 'lock <file>' line indicating a file under
 236GIT_DIR/objects/pack which is keeping a pack until refs can be
 237suitably updated.
 238+
 239Supported if the helper has the "fetch" capability.
 240
 241'push' +<src>:<dst>::
 242        Pushes the given local <src> commit or branch to the
 243        remote branch described by <dst>.  A batch sequence of
 244        one or more 'push' commands is terminated with a blank line
 245        (if there is only one reference to push, a single 'push' command
 246        is followed by a blank line). For example, the following would
 247        be two batches of 'push', the first asking the remote-helper
 248        to push the local ref 'master' to the remote ref 'master' and
 249        the local 'HEAD' to the remote 'branch', and the second
 250        asking to push ref 'foo' to ref 'bar' (forced update requested
 251        by the '+').
 252+
 253------------
 254push refs/heads/master:refs/heads/master
 255push HEAD:refs/heads/branch
 256\n
 257push +refs/heads/foo:refs/heads/bar
 258\n
 259------------
 260+
 261Zero or more protocol options may be entered after the last 'push'
 262command, before the batch's terminating blank line.
 263+
 264When the push is complete, outputs one or more 'ok <dst>' or
 265'error <dst> <why>?' lines to indicate success or failure of
 266each pushed ref.  The status report output is terminated by
 267a blank line.  The option field <why> may be quoted in a C
 268style string if it contains an LF.
 269+
 270Supported if the helper has the "push" capability.
 271
 272'import' <name>::
 273        Produces a fast-import stream which imports the current value
 274        of the named ref. It may additionally import other refs as
 275        needed to construct the history efficiently. The script writes
 276        to a helper-specific private namespace. The value of the named
 277        ref should be written to a location in this namespace derived
 278        by applying the refspecs from the "refspec" capability to the
 279        name of the ref.
 280+
 281Especially useful for interoperability with a foreign versioning
 282system.
 283+
 284Just like 'push', a batch sequence of one or more 'import' is
 285terminated with a blank line. For each batch of 'import', the remote
 286helper should produce a fast-import stream terminated by a 'done'
 287command.
 288+
 289Supported if the helper has the "import" capability.
 290
 291'connect' <service>::
 292        Connects to given service. Standard input and standard output
 293        of helper are connected to specified service (git prefix is
 294        included in service name so e.g. fetching uses 'git-upload-pack'
 295        as service) on remote side. Valid replies to this command are
 296        empty line (connection established), 'fallback' (no smart
 297        transport support, fall back to dumb transports) and just
 298        exiting with error message printed (can't connect, don't
 299        bother trying to fall back). After line feed terminating the
 300        positive (empty) response, the output of service starts. After
 301        the connection ends, the remote helper exits.
 302+
 303Supported if the helper has the "connect" capability.
 304
 305If a fatal error occurs, the program writes the error message to
 306stderr and exits. The caller should expect that a suitable error
 307message has been printed if the child closes the connection without
 308completing a valid response for the current command.
 309
 310Additional commands may be supported, as may be determined from
 311capabilities reported by the helper.
 312
 313REF LIST ATTRIBUTES
 314-------------------
 315
 316'for-push'::
 317        The caller wants to use the ref list to prepare push
 318        commands.  A helper might chose to acquire the ref list by
 319        opening a different type of connection to the destination.
 320
 321'unchanged'::
 322        This ref is unchanged since the last import or fetch, although
 323        the helper cannot necessarily determine what value that produced.
 324
 325OPTIONS
 326-------
 327'option verbosity' <n>::
 328        Changes the verbosity of messages displayed by the helper.
 329        A value of 0 for <n> means that processes operate
 330        quietly, and the helper produces only error output.
 331        1 is the default level of verbosity, and higher values
 332        of <n> correspond to the number of -v flags passed on the
 333        command line.
 334
 335'option progress' \{'true'|'false'\}::
 336        Enables (or disables) progress messages displayed by the
 337        transport helper during a command.
 338
 339'option depth' <depth>::
 340        Deepens the history of a shallow repository.
 341
 342'option followtags' \{'true'|'false'\}::
 343        If enabled the helper should automatically fetch annotated
 344        tag objects if the object the tag points at was transferred
 345        during the fetch command.  If the tag is not fetched by
 346        the helper a second fetch command will usually be sent to
 347        ask for the tag specifically.  Some helpers may be able to
 348        use this option to avoid a second network connection.
 349
 350'option dry-run' \{'true'|'false'\}:
 351        If true, pretend the operation completed successfully,
 352        but don't actually change any repository data.  For most
 353        helpers this only applies to the 'push', if supported.
 354
 355'option servpath <c-style-quoted-path>'::
 356        Sets service path (--upload-pack, --receive-pack etc.) for
 357        next connect. Remote helper may support this option, but
 358        must not rely on this option being set before
 359        connect request occurs.
 360
 361SEE ALSO
 362--------
 363linkgit:git-remote[1]
 364
 365linkgit:git-remote-testgit[1]
 366
 367GIT
 368---
 369Part of the linkgit:git[1] suite